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7
Oct 12

Catching up

Another Sunday, another post full of extra pictures. (Because you, clearly, did not get enough yesterday. What was that, like 35 photographs? Might be a personal record for one post.) Anyway.

I spend a bit of time teaching best practice strategies for new technologies. And yet, on campus, the traditional techniques are sometimes the best:

chalk

As I’ve written before, we have a giant chalkboard in the Crimson’s office. Our opinion editor, Zach Brown likes to scribble on the chalkboard. He drew this figure and the text on the right. I completed the joke:

chalk

Hitting a restaurant in the middle of the afternoon allows for quiet, empty moments like these. This is at Tenda Chick on Glenn-Dean. Still the best chicken fingers in town.

Tenda

Saw this outside my orthopedist’s office. I wonder when he bought that, found it funny and true and pulled off the paper backing. I wonder how often he glances at that, reflects and says, “Yeah. Perot. I should have done it twice.”

bumpersticker

Someone is a bit more cynical, aren’t they?

sticker


6
Oct 12

Arkansas at Auburn (who is not very good)

It was a beautiful day to be outside. And a lovely afternoon to watch two struggling teams see who could struggle the least and overcome the most. It was a beautiful day to be outside.

Arkansas’ Tyler Wilson drove his team down the field on their opening drive and set up a field goal try. The Hogs missed.

TylerWilson

Nova flew. I have a huge panaroma of it I’ll show off later this week.

Nova

Tre Mason carried the ball six times for 32 yards. This was Auburn’s second-leading rusher.

Tre Mason

Onterio McCalebb had seven carries for just 24 yards. He remains 11th on the all time school rushing list. He’s now fifth all time in kickoff yards and sixth all time in all purpose yards. This is a rough way to experience a senior season:

OnterioMcCalebb

Kiehl Frazier rushed five times. In the college game sack yardage is subtracted from rushing totals. He was sacked four times, so he had -25 yards rushing on the day.

KiehlFrazier

Aubie throws pigs in a blanket to kids. Razorbacks, Hogs, pigs in a blanket. Get it?

Aubie

Kiehl Frazier was nine of 14 for 118 yards with one interception. It was, in some respects, perhaps his most manageable performance of the season. Still not convinced Scot Loeffler, the new offensive coordinator, is setting him up to succeed. They pulled the sophomore at halftime.

KiehlFrazier

Angelo Blackson is a beast, but Tyler Wilson found Dennis Johnson. The running back caught four passes for 15 yards.

AngeloBlackson

Aubie just wants to bang on his drum all day.

Aubie

I just like this one because it shows how close blocked kicks can be. Zach Hooker was one of three for the day.

ZachHooker

Trey Flowers (86) of Huntsville, Ala., had a great day. He had three-and-a-half sacks totaling 39 yards. Think he was inspired to play in his home state?

TreyFlowers

And now, a series of fan shots:

fans

fans

fans

fans

fans

fans

fans

fans

fans

That is a bedazzled phone:

fans

Old school hat. I bet he’s a graduate of API.

fans

We’re all sad at halftime. Auburn is not playing well.

fans

It is almost like the offense is handcuffed. I blame the offensive coordinator.

Aubie

The fans are wondering what is going on out there?

fans

But, hey! Look who’s on the field!

fans

Clint Mosely, much as he did last year, was called into action to start the second half of a game where the offense was underperforming. It felt that he was a bit more in command of things, where the younger Frazier still looks a bit hesitant.

ClintMoseley

And the defense has been growing up recently. Jake Holland puts pressure on the quarterback:

JakeHolland

But Tyler Wilson kept finding open receivers. Here’s Dennis Johnson again.

TylerWilson

Aubie got his roll on, even as it became clear that the Tigers were going to lose:

Aubie

Though it was hardly all roses for Clint Moseley he went 13 of 21 with two interceptions and was sacked four times for a loss of 41(!) yards he did produce the one score of the day, play-faking and then looking to the corner of the field:

ClintMoseley

And Moseley found Emory Blake, who made the catch, turned and dived inside the pylon. That score moved Blake into a tie for fifth all-time in receiving touchdowns. He finished the day tied for 10th all-time in receiving yards.

EmoryBlake

I don’t why this guy put this on. It was 85 degrees:

Say Tigers!

Auburn lost 24-7, falling to 1-4 on the year. So we’ll fall back on the old saying “War Eagle anyway.”

Still number one in the hearts of fans, though.


3
Oct 12

And the spiders?

I mentioned Colin Hay on Twitter last night, since you asked. I really fell into Hay’s music again around 2000 or so, and then again off and on since. For a while, I’ve been trying to describe it. If there is an overriding sentiment, what would it be? I’ve settled on midlife, convertible, late-afternoon sun.

The prologue in that particular live performance is his getting dropped by his record label after Men at Work. He released the album carrying that song in his mid-40s, so it makes sense.

The debates? Twitter had a big night. Remember when the media scoffed at Twitter? I love that all the big national folks fall all over themselves to report about it now. I bet we’ll find that this was one of the biggest nights yet for the microblogger.

New York Times? Fact checking in real time.

Who won? Big Bird, clearly. Maybe he should moderate the next one. And if that works out well, maybe we could start a write-in campaign for him.

Thirty-one cases of West Nile Virus in the state. Guess that’ll be the watchword of the season again.

Speaking of arboviral diseases, researchers are tracking down where Eastern equine encephalitis spends the winter. Snakes!

The spiders? They’ve got nothing to do with it. They’re just over here making art.

SpiderArt

Looks even more like a heart today.

More on Tumblr and Twitter.


2
Oct 12

Spider art

Just two pictures today. Mostly because I want to try an experiment.

There are bushes outside my building on campus. Inside those bushes live spiders. Maybe they are tiny. Perhaps they are itsy and or bitsy. I’ve never seen them, but I know their work.

We really see their work after it rains.

SpiderArt

This one strikes me as particularly beautiful. And optimistic, stretching a web horizontally across two bushes. Doesn’t seem the most efficient use of your webby resources. But, still, lovely.

SpiderArt

I wonder what they’ll look like tomorrow.


1
Oct 12

We know these things because of the Internet

Allie would like to thank you for taking part in another successful Catember. The categories are archived in a reverse chronological order, but you might be interested in seeing three entire years of Catember joy. You would start right here.

She would never let on, but I think Allie likes being famous on the Internet. She pretends to be annoyed by some of the cameras — the iPhone in particular, though she is very patient with DSLRs — but she is very proud of the attention. So when I told her this weekend that Catember was almost over — she’s a cat, she doesn’t read calendars — she was a bit sad:

Allie

Cats are tough, though. She’ll bounce back soon.

Something new is the Alabama Media Group, which is launching this week. There is a lot of criticism in the fall air, but some people have to do that so they can later point out they’ve been screaming the loudest. This is largely untrodden ground that the people at AMG are walking, but I know those folks at al.com and many of the people at the three papers that are used to producing the old daily miracle. Give them a bit of time and they’ll do some impressive work.

So it is a big week in local news. First, on college campuses everywhere, the Clery Act reports are due.

Can The Boston Globe and MIT hack the future of news together? Maybe for them. But I have this growing suspicion that these answers will all be locally customized:

“In the long term, maybe we’ll come up with something that will matter to the organization, to the bottom line,” he said. “In the short term, it’s just really cool to have these cool ideas floating around.”

Marstall said his goal is to have experimental modules that readers can play with on Boston.com and provide feedback to the Globe Lab. The lab was created for the purpose of exploring ideas that could be transformed into products for the Globe, or tools that could be helpful in reporting, Marstall said. The additional manpower, and brainpower, provided by MIT, will accelerate that, he said.

The reason a handful of news organizations have created their own research and development labs is to have people working on new ideas outside of the day-to-day business concerns of journalism, Moriarty said.

Seems like Jeff Moriarty, vice president of digital products at the Globe, agrees, doesn’t it?

Pew: After email, getting news is the most popular activity on smartphones, tablets Why are tablets good? These findings:

Another key finding: Almost one-third of people who acquire tablets find themselves reading more news from more sources than before.

What they’re reading is also interesting. Almost three-fourths of tablet news readers consumed in-depth news articles at least sometimes, with 19 percent saying they do so daily.

Here are the revenue notes, from that same Pew study.

I tell students you don’t write question leads or question headlines. Only very, very occasionally, I say, are they appropriate. Here might be an example: Are we already in a recession?

Most of the time and for most people, the difference between no growth and contraction probably doesn’t mean that much. However, we are in a much different situation now than we were in 2007. The Federal Reserve has more or less gone all in with its open-ended quantitative easing. The government’s fiscal mechanism is paralyzed and a large portion of the electorate has no appetite for further fiscal stimulus. If the American economy were to go into a so-called “double-dip” recession the government would be especially hard-pressed to drag us out. It would be a huge blow to the nation’s confidence and would lead to shrinking government revenues and further net job loss in both the public and private sectors.

For those reasons, it’s more than a little frightening that we’re seeing a spate of depressing numbers that could signal a recession on the horizon — or that one is already here.

Read the whole thing.

I mentioned the other day how an old online friend popped up on Twitter out of the blue last week.

The Internet is a lovely thing, really. Tonight I’ve been chatting with a guy I used to play soccer with. He was a defender, probably the fastest guy I played with, who had the natural ability that comes with working really hard at something. We played with a few very gifted guys, but he made himself as good or better than all of them. He was never afraid of work that was hard or to put in the time to make something good.

Good guy. We grew up together. We avoided trouble together. We probably caused some, too. Here’s a grainy and bad picture of an OK picture. This is some birthday of mine, probably 12, I’d guess.

Dave

We were at a restaurant called China Doll. For my birthday, and by then I’d gotten to that awkward feeling of people giving me presents, he gave me a knife he found in a scabbard he’d made. It was a very nice and thoughtful gift.

We lost touch somewhere just after high school, which is one of those small things that shouldn’t happen, but now he’s popped up on Facebook.

He’s got a beautiful wife and a handsome son. He’s in Afghanistan and, for him, that seems just about perfect. (Told him I was teaching journalism. He said he’d always thought I would have made a great comedian.)

I see his pictures and he looks exactly the same, just a little more intense. There’s a picture of him and his mother on there that I could write full essays about.

He’s got plans to open a paradise resort, hopefully some time next year after he rotates out. Told him I’d swing by and help him hammer things.

Hey, I can bend nails in paradise, too.